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I've been looking through Shlomo Aloni's Osprey book on
Israeli F-4 Phantom aces, and I note that around the time of the '73 war when they want to carry AIM-9s, they either 1. don't carry any A/G stores on that pylon (when carrying two AIM-9D/Gs on the shoulder mounts), or 2. only carry a single AIM-9D/G on one shoulder mount and delete the store carried on the same side (i.e., either the I/B or O/B side) station of the TER. Because they seem to have valued the AIM-9 far more than the AIM-7 for their strikers, the Israelis were often flying with a highly assymetric load, i.e. 5 M117s on the C/L, 3 M117s on the right I/B, and two AIM-9s on the left I/B, plus two tanks. I know that USAF F-4s were only able to fire AIM-9s OR drop bombs on a single mission prior to 1973 or so owing to wiring limitations (which is probably represented by condition 1 above), but condition 2 above implies that there's a clearance problem even after the wiring was changed. The Israelis later went so far as to develop an adapter for the forward right Sparrow well that allowed an IRM to be carried there, which allowed them to carry two bombs plus one AIM-9/Python 3 on the left I/B, decreasing the assymetry to almost nothing and increasing the bombload while still carrying a pair of IRMs. Can any of our resident F-4 types comment as to whether there were such clearance restrictions for simultaneous AIM-9/bomb carriage? TIA, Guy |
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On Sun, 13 Jun 2004 21:02:14 GMT, Guy Alcala
wrote: I've been looking through Shlomo Aloni's Osprey book on Israeli F-4 Phantom aces, and I note that around the time of the '73 war when they want to carry AIM-9s, they either 1. don't carry any A/G stores on that pylon (when carrying two AIM-9D/Gs on the shoulder mounts), or 2. only carry a single AIM-9D/G on one shoulder mount and delete the store carried on the same side (i.e., either the I/B or O/B side) station of the TER. Because they seem to have valued the AIM-9 far more than the AIM-7 for their strikers, the Israelis were often flying with a highly assymetric load, i.e. 5 M117s on the C/L, 3 M117s on the right I/B, and two AIM-9s on the left I/B, plus two tanks. I know that USAF F-4s were only able to fire AIM-9s OR drop bombs on a single mission prior to 1973 or so owing to wiring limitations (which is probably represented by condition 1 above), but condition 2 above implies that there's a clearance problem even after the wiring was changed. The Israelis later went so far as to develop an adapter for the forward right Sparrow well that allowed an IRM to be carried there, which allowed them to carry two bombs plus one AIM-9/Python 3 on the left I/B, decreasing the assymetry to almost nothing and increasing the bombload while still carrying a pair of IRMs. Can any of our resident F-4 types comment as to whether there were such clearance restrictions for simultaneous AIM-9/bomb carriage? TIA, Guy I'm not able to comment on what the IAF was doing, but can make a couple of observations about the USAF aircraft at the time. The AIM-9 was carried on a "T" launcher suspended from the 14" suspension points on the MAU-12 adapter on the I/B pylons. Two missiles could be carried on each I/B station. No other equipment could be carried on the pylon. Typical A/A configured flights carried 4xAIM-9, 3xAIM-7, an ECM pod in a forward Sparrow well and three tanks. By 1974 a mod had been designed for the pylon that allowed for shoulder carriage of the AIM-9. These bolt-on stations were on either side of the pylon and allowed for the IR missiles to be carried and fired with any other normally suspended store on the usual gear. (I've got to opine that the problem of firing missiles from the station with ordnance seems moot--if you engage enemy aircraft, step one is dump the iron.) It is possible that the IAF were also carrying ALE-40 or similar locally produced chaff/flare dispensers. The ALE-40 blisters on the trailing edge of the side of the pylon might have been the problem for the shoulder mounted AIM-9s. Ed Rasimus Fighter Pilot (USAF-Ret) "When Thunder Rolled" Smithsonian Institution Press ISBN #1-58834-103-8 |
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On Sun, 13 Jun 2004 21:02:14 GMT, Guy Alcala
wrote: Can any of our resident F-4 types comment as to whether there were such clearance restrictions for simultaneous AIM-9/bomb carriage? http://www.wpafb.af.mil/museum/modern_flight/mf47.jpg |
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Ed Rasimus wrote in message . ..
On Sun, 13 Jun 2004 21:02:14 GMT, Guy Alcala wrote: SNIP: By 1974 a mod had been designed for the pylon that allowed for shoulder carriage of the AIM-9. These bolt-on stations were on either side of the pylon and allowed for the IR missiles to be carried and fired with any other normally suspended store on the usual gear. Ed Rasimus SNIP It's been a long time since I was there but I seem to remember we had the shoulder-mounted AIM9 rails in the 366th TFW at Da Nang in 72. I do know mounting them there was essentially no big deal, involving spacers and some rewiring. Our normal load back then was 2 AIM7, 2AIM9B, a C/L tank, an ECM pod in the RF Sparrow well and whatever air-to-ground ordnance was needed for the mission, usually but certainly not limited to 12xMk82 slicks (sometimes 18). Other items were CBU24/52, Mk36 cluster, Mk36 destructor (MK82 mine-fuzed), Mk82/84 fuze-extended, BLU-1B + Mk82HD. Walt BJ |
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Ed Rasimus wrote in
news ![]() It is possible that the IAF were also carrying ALE-40 or similar locally produced chaff/flare dispensers. The ALE-40 blisters on the trailing edge of the side of the pylon might have been the problem for the shoulder mounted AIM-9s. Ed, the Luftwaffe use shoulder pylons and ALE-40 on their F-4Fs seemingly without issue FWIW. . . -- Regards Drewe "Better the pride that resides In a citizen of the world Than the pride that divides When a colourful rag is unfurled" |
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Ed Rasimus wrote:
On Sun, 13 Jun 2004 21:02:14 GMT, Guy Alcala wrote: I've been looking through Shlomo Aloni's Osprey book on Israeli F-4 Phantom aces, and I note that around the time of the '73 war when they want to carry AIM-9s, they either 1. don't carry any A/G stores on that pylon (when carrying two AIM-9D/Gs on the shoulder mounts), or 2. only carry a single AIM-9D/G on one shoulder mount and delete the store carried on the same side (i.e., either the I/B or O/B side) station of the TER. Because they seem to have valued the AIM-9 far more than the AIM-7 for their strikers, the Israelis were often flying with a highly assymetric load, i.e. 5 M117s on the C/L, 3 M117s on the right I/B, and two AIM-9s on the left I/B, plus two tanks. I know that USAF F-4s were only able to fire AIM-9s OR drop bombs on a single mission prior to 1973 or so owing to wiring limitations (which is probably represented by condition 1 above), but condition 2 above implies that there's a clearance problem even after the wiring was changed. The Israelis later went so far as to develop an adapter for the forward right Sparrow well that allowed an IRM to be carried there, which allowed them to carry two bombs plus one AIM-9/Python 3 on the left I/B, decreasing the assymetry to almost nothing and increasing the bombload while still carrying a pair of IRMs. Can any of our resident F-4 types comment as to whether there were such clearance restrictions for simultaneous AIM-9/bomb carriage? TIA, Guy I'm not able to comment on what the IAF was doing, but can make a couple of observations about the USAF aircraft at the time. The AIM-9 was carried on a "T" launcher suspended from the 14" suspension points on the MAU-12 adapter on the I/B pylons. Two missiles could be carried on each I/B station. No other equipment could be carried on the pylon. Typical A/A configured flights carried 4xAIM-9, 3xAIM-7, an ECM pod in a forward Sparrow well and three tanks. By 1974 a mod had been designed for the pylon that allowed for shoulder carriage of the AIM-9. These bolt-on stations were on either side of the pylon and allowed for the IR missiles to be carried and fired with any other normally suspended store on the usual gear. And the IAF aircraft have both AIM-9 shoes and TERs simultaneously on the I/B pylons, but they don't load AIM-9s and bombs on the same side of the pylon. (I've got to opine that the problem of firing missiles from the station with ordnance seems moot--if you engage enemy aircraft, step one is dump the iron.) While they often had to hit the panic button and clean the a/c up, there are at least a few accounts in the book where bombs were retained and an AIM-9 shot was taken. The primary mission was bombs on target, and every load jettisoned was a victory for the Egyptian/Syrian Migs. The other thing that occurs to me is that dropping/jettisoning a bomb on the same side of the pylon as an AIM-9 might hit the missile tail fins, i.e. there could be clearance problems both ways. It is possible that the IAF were also carrying ALE-40 or similar locally produced chaff/flare dispensers. The ALE-40 blisters on the trailing edge of the side of the pylon might have been the problem for the shoulder mounted AIM-9s. I thought of that, but it's impossible to tell from the available photos if ALE-40s were present -- you need an almost head-on shot of an I/B pylon, or else no tanks/ordnance on the O/B pylons if the photo is from the side. They definitely had pods available at the time, ALQ-87s (maybe even some ALQ-71s) up through ALQ-101(V)4 or so. OTOH, I'm pretty sure I've seen photos of F-4s with TERs, AIM-9 launchers _and_ ALE-40s on the I/Bs (the AIM-9 launch shoes definitely clear the dispenser; I assume the missile tail fins would also), so it appears that the problem isn't physical clearance, although I suppose there might be safety limits due to the proximity of the missile(s) motor nozzle to the pyrotechnics in the ALE-40. However, ISTR that such shots tend to be of the airshow/museum "everything we might ever _think_ of putting on an a/c" variety, so I don't know if such photos represent an operationally allowed loadout. Anyone know if AIM-9s were allowed to be fired if you had chaff/flares in the ALE-40s? Guy |
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Buzzer wrote:
On Sun, 13 Jun 2004 21:02:14 GMT, Guy Alcala wrote: Can any of our resident F-4 types comment as to whether there were such clearance restrictions for simultaneous AIM-9/bomb carriage? http://www.wpafb.af.mil/museum/modern_flight/mf47.jpg Yeah, Bob, but that's a post-Vietnam mod; the F-4C (including Olds' 64-0829) could never carry AIM-9s and TERs/bombs during its service in Vietnam, as they used the AIM-9 rack which Ed mentioned, the one hung from the MAU-12. I can't find any photos of any USAF F-4s in SEA up through 1972 with AIM-9s plus any other ordnance on the I/Bs, with one exception. The 432nd carried AIM-9s and pods on the I/B on their F-4Ds starting at some point in 1972, so maybe they got the AIM-9 shoulder mount mod before everyone else. Walt thinks the 366th may have had them as well; the only shots I have of 366th a/c in 1972 show F-4Es with pure A/G or pure A/A loads, so that's no help. The thing that tends to convince me there was a clearance problem of some kind is that I can't see the Israelis (or anyone else) wasting all the time and effort to develop an AIM-9 adapter for the forward right Sparrow bay, if they could have just as easily carried dual AIM-9s plus TER/bombs on the I/B pylon -- that would be (Vulcan arched eyebrow) highly illogical. That, and the fact that a cursory search has failed to turn up a single photo of a USAF F-4 in flight carrying AIM-9s and anything more threatening than an ECM or travel pod on the same I/B pylon, although again Walt thinks the 366th may have carried bombs/missiles on the same pylon at Danang (but he's not absolutely certain). Ah well, USAF F-4s in Vietnam may just have been a bit too early to show the mod in use. Guy |
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In article ,
Guy Alcala wrote: Ed Rasimus wrote: It is possible that the IAF were also carrying ALE-40 or similar locally produced chaff/flare dispensers. The ALE-40 blisters on the trailing edge of the side of the pylon might have been the problem for the shoulder mounted AIM-9s. We didn't have to remove the ALE-40s from the pylons when they loaded Sidewinders (early 1980s). I thought of that, but it's impossible to tell from the available photos if ALE-40s were present -- you need an almost head-on shot of an I/B pylon, or else no tanks/ordnance on the O/B pylons if the photo is from the side. If you can get a ground shot, you could usually tell if there was chaff on the plane from the safety pin ribbons hanging down at the back of the pylon - nothing else on the pylons was that far back that needed pins. OTOH, I'm pretty sure I've seen photos of F-4s with TERs, AIM-9 launchers _and_ ALE-40s on the I/Bs (the AIM-9 launch shoes definitely clear the dispenser; I assume the missile tail fins would also), so it appears that the problem isn't physical clearance, although I suppose there might be safety limits due to the proximity of the missile(s) motor nozzle to the pyrotechnics in the ALE-40. The casing of the ALE-40 was streamlined, far enough back, and thick enough that a second of flame from a rocket motor shouldn't have caused any issues, especially since the Sidewinders were further out than the dispensers. The box was only a foot or so tall, about six inches through, tapered, and the carts were pretty nicely sealed (and electrically fired). Here's a couple of pics of the master dispenser on the left side with a flare adapter mounted: http://www.b-domke.de/AviationImages/Phantom/1340.html http://www.b-domke.de/AviationImages/Phantom/1341.html Here's one of an F-4F, with live Sidewinders (but no flares loaded): http://www.b-domke.de/AviationImages/Phantom/2992.html You can tell there's no flares on the dispenser because the flare adapter is visible between the top two rear fins on the closer AIM-9 (and no safety pin, either). However, ISTR that such shots tend to be of the airshow/museum "everything we might ever _think_ of putting on an a/c" variety, so I don't know if such photos represent an operationally allowed loadout. Anyone know if AIM-9s were allowed to be fired if you had chaff/flares in the ALE-40s? What good would a chaff/flare system be if you could only use it if you gave up your short-range missiles? I'm pretty sure the times we took the dispensers off were for carrying missiles with really large tail fins, or for long-distance flights to clean up the airframe a bit. We didn't remove them that often, and we flew Sidewinders (or at least training AIM-9) all of the time. Well, that's not *exactly* right - for a while, the Powers That Be decided to yank the dispensers off of the planes whenever they didn't "need" them, and put them back when they were firing chaff or practicing using the system (the stepper motors/switches were inside of the outboard dispenser boxes, controlled from the panel in the cockpit, and the system wouldn't work at *all* if the pylon units weren't on the plane). After a lot of overtime for the sheet metal guys (those interior pylon nutplates were *not* designed for regular removal/replacement and were a stone cold pain to replace), they decided the dispensers could stay on the planes until otherwise needed. -- cirby at cfl.rr.com Remember: Objects in rearview mirror may be hallucinations. Slam on brakes accordingly. |
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On Tue, 15 Jun 2004 07:19:28 GMT, Guy Alcala
wrote: Yeah, Bob, but that's a post-Vietnam mod; the F-4C (including Olds' 64-0829) could never carry AIM-9s and TERs/bombs during its service in Vietnam, as they used the AIM-9 rack which Ed mentioned, the one hung from the MAU-12. I can't find any photos of any USAF F-4s in SEA up through 1972 with AIM-9s plus any other ordnance on the I/Bs, with one exception. The 432nd carried AIM-9s and pods on the I/B on their F-4Ds starting at some point in 1972, so maybe they got the AIM-9 shoulder mount mod before everyone else. Walt thinks the 366th may have had them as well; the only shots I have of 366th a/c in 1972 show F-4Es with pure A/G or pure A/A loads, so that's no help. "The armament loaded on this F-4C (as displayed) consists of four AIM-7E and four AIM-9B air-to-air missiles, and eight 750 lb. Mk 117 bombs. The aircraft is also carrying two external 370 gallon fuel tanks on the outboard pylons and one ALQ-87 electronic countermeasures (ECM) pod on the right inboard pylon. This was one of the typical armament configurations for the F-4C during the Vietnam War in the summer of 1967." So this isn't accurate?G Just thinking when they went to the inboard pod they lost the ability to carry four AIM-9 from what mid 1967 to 1972? Maybe the Israelis figured two Aim-9 were better than one Sparrow? The thing that tends to convince me there was a clearance problem of some kind is that I can't see the Israelis (or anyone else) wasting all the time and effort to develop an AIM-9 adapter for the forward right Sparrow bay, if they could have just as easily carried dual AIM-9s plus TER/bombs on the I/B pylon -- that would be (Vulcan arched eyebrow) highly illogical. That, and the fact that a cursory search has failed to turn up a single photo of a USAF F-4 in flight carrying AIM-9s and anything more threatening than an ECM or travel pod on the same I/B pylon, although again Walt thinks the 366th may have carried bombs/missiles on the same pylon at Danang (but he's not absolutely certain). Ah well, USAF F-4s in Vietnam may just have been a bit too early to show the mod in use. Guy |
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Chad Irby wrote:
In article , Guy Alcala wrote: snip OTOH, I'm pretty sure I've seen photos of F-4s with TERs, AIM-9 launchers _and_ ALE-40s on the I/Bs (the AIM-9 launch shoes definitely clear the dispenser; I assume the missile tail fins would also), so it appears that the problem isn't physical clearance, although I suppose there might be safety limits due to the proximity of the missile(s) motor nozzle to the pyrotechnics in the ALE-40. The casing of the ALE-40 was streamlined, far enough back, and thick enough that a second of flame from a rocket motor shouldn't have caused any issues, especially since the Sidewinders were further out than the dispensers. The box was only a foot or so tall, about six inches through, tapered, and the carts were pretty nicely sealed (and electrically fired). Here's a couple of pics of the master dispenser on the left side with a flare adapter mounted: http://www.b-domke.de/AviationImages/Phantom/1340.html http://www.b-domke.de/AviationImages/Phantom/1341.html Thanks for the links. The only photos I have of ALE-40s on a/c lack the slanted fairing at the aft end (I assume this is the flare adapter you refer to). I have one shot from the rear side of the pylon where you can see the aft end (I/B side dispenser) tilted down with what's clearly the 15 compartment flare interior (the O/B side dispenser has the 30 compartment chaff setup, and comes back level), but the cover plate bolts and aft side don't look the same as the one in the photo. Probably just a slightly different model of ALE-40. Here's one of an F-4F, with live Sidewinders (but no flares loaded): http://www.b-domke.de/AviationImages/Phantom/2992.html You can tell there's no flares on the dispenser because the flare adapter is visible between the top two rear fins on the closer AIM-9 (and no safety pin, either). However, ISTR that such shots tend to be of the airshow/museum "everything we might ever _think_ of putting on an a/c" variety, so I don't know if such photos represent an operationally allowed loadout. Anyone know if AIM-9s were allowed to be fired if you had chaff/flares in the ALE-40s? What good would a chaff/flare system be if you could only use it if you gave up your short-range missiles? Beats not having them at all, I guess, especially if the main threat was SA systems and you were going to use the decoys on every mission but might never need the AIM-9s (and then most likely on egress), but I agree it would be less than ideal. If push came to shove, I'm sure the pilot would say 'screw it' and fire anyway, if their were no interlocks which prevented that. As it was, the USAF fought most or all the Vietnam War with F-4s that couldn't carry bombs and AIM-9s at the same time, leaving the strikers to rely on (typically) a pair of AIM-7s (and a gun if E models) if they got jumped. That seems pretty dumb too, but we did it. I'm pretty sure the times we took the dispensers off were for carrying missiles with really large tail fins, snip Yeah, they seem to be missing when carrying GBU-15s or Walleyes, and I'm not sure about Standards or Paveway I (non-folding fin) Mk.84s. Guy |
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